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Policing race, ethnicity and culture

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The book explores interactions between police officers and citizens in European countries, asking how differences such as race, culture and ethnicity are brought up and in what way they shape these...
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  • 28 March 2023
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How to deal with differences based on culture, ethnicity and race, has become a key issue of policing. This edited collected explores everyday, often mundane interactions between police officers and migrantised actors in European countries and asks how both sides deal with perceived differences. The contributions reflect that such differences are not just ‘out there’ but are being situationally (re-)produced in police-citizen encounters. By taking a comparative approach, the book develops a distinctly European perspective on these questions. The book contains 12 ethnographies from ten European countries, based on new and often innovative empirical research, two theoretical contributions, an introduction and a postface.
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Price: £90.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 28 March 2023
ISBN: 9781526165589
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Sociology and anthropology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Law Enforcement, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Social and cultural anthropology, Police and security services

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'This book is a recommended study that nicely incorporates anthropology, criminology, history, linguistics, and sociology.'
Ryan Shaffer, Ethnic and Racial Studies

'The ethnographic observations on Europe at the center of Policing race, ethnicity and culture: Ethnographic perspectives across Europe are much appreciated because the literature on policing and racial relations is typically heavily focused on the United States. This book effectively situates race, ethnicity and culture at the center of how police forces (re)produce - and govern - moral and institutional parameters, allowing for a comparative study of police relationships with newcomers in Europe.'
Muhammad Asad Latif, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics

'Policing race, ethnicity and culture provides inspiring leads for future studies of the police and of migrant-state interactions in Europe. It is, therefore, a must read for both students and researchers across the board of social sciences.'
Sophie Andreetta, Legal Pluralism and Critical Social Analysis

'Through the diversity of the contexts studied and [...] a real empirical anchoring which leaves a large place for the words of the actors [...] this work makes an important contribution to the analysis of the role of the police in the (re)production of racial categories in European societies.'
Paul Grassin, Government and Public Action

Introduction
Policing differences: perspectives from Europe – Jan Beek, Thomas Bierschenk and Annalena Kolloch

Part I: Categorizations of difference in police work

1 Police racism in France and Germany: occupational socialisation and institutional guidelines – Jérémie Gauthier and Jacques de Maillard
2 Policing order: ethnicity in statistics and the functions of nationalism – Rebecca Pates
3 Predictively policed: the Dutch CAS case and its forerunners – Paul Mutsaers and Tom van Nuenen
4 The social construction of parallel society in Swedish police documents – Ida Nafstad

Part II: Doing differences in everyday policing
5 Dirty Harry gone global? On globalising policing and punitive impotence – David Sausdal
6 Instrumentalising racism in Russian policing: everyday interactions between police officers and migrants – Ekaterina Khodzhaeva
7 Negotiating with ethnic diversity: perceptions and patterns in everyday police work in Germany – Nina Müller
8 ‘Do you understand? Yes, you understand.’: bureaucratic translations of difference during deportation talks in Switzerland – Lisa Marie Borrelli

Part III: Policing as translation
9 Inclusive and non-inclusive modes of communication in multilingual operational police training – Annalena Kolloch and Bernd Meyer
10 Talking with hands and feet: language differences and translation in German policing – Jan Beek and Marcel Müller
11 The Portuguese police and colonial legacies: when language divides – Susana Durão

Part IV: Police officers and ethnographers
12 Albanian culture and major crime: challenging culturalist assumptions among investigating UK police – Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers
13 Approaching foreign milieus: experiences from a joint seminar with police trainees and anthropology students – Gisela Pauli Caldas and Thomas Widlok

Postface
Authorizing race: on police reproduction of difference – Ian Loader